eatyourchildren wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
Doesn't matter. The game didn't necessitate him taking 26 shots. If you're saying Kobe had the most impact by taking Martin away from the paint, you're right. But he wasn't keeping Martin honest by draining shots, that's for sure. Karl was determined to keep Martin on Kobe, so the best thing he could have done was drive the lane and pitch out.
He did that maybe 3 times all game, and also decided to shoot 26 times when Odom, Walton, and Gasol were clearly having better games.
Just admit it, Kobe had a bad game.
So far I've only seen the 4th quarter and the highlights from the Lakersground.net but I would think that driving on KMart when he's clearly giving it to you on purpose is playing into the defenses hands. Usually big men play far off guards to negate the drive but if KMart was doing exactly the opposite fro the start of the game then it was probably by design.
Keeping Martin out of the paint on defense probably goes a long way to weakening Denver's defense by essentially removing one of their best shot blockers and rebounders from the mix.
I save judgement until I finish downloading the torrent but I will say that I typically don't judge how well someone played by their shooting percentage. It's one thing to shoot bad and another to shoot bad shots. Was he stalling the offense? Forcing shots against multiple defenders? Losing the ball in traffic (I see he only had 1 turnover)? Was he shooting before rebounders were in position?
"I'm sure they'll jump off the bandwagon. Then when we do get back on top, they're going to want to jump back on, and we're going to tell them there's no more room." - Kobe in March of 2005